posted on Wednesday, July 30, 2008 8:27 AM
by
klehan
CO Alarms Now Mandatory in All Minnesota Homes
The goal is to reduce deaths -- there were 92 in Minnesota from 2002 to 2006 -- from the
colorless, tasteless, odorless gas.
A new law takes effect Friday requiring all single-family homes in Minnesota to have a
carbon-monoxide detector within 10 feet of each bedroom.
With that deadline looming, the fire chiefs of Minneapolis and St. Paul, state legislators and the parents of a 3-year-old who died from carbon-monoxide poisoning are
getting the word out about the requirement.
This morning, the city of St. Paul will receive 500 detectors to be given to families who
otherwise cannot afford them. The price of a battery-operated detector starts at a little
more than $20.
Minnesota's law is being implemented in three phases:
Phase 1, requiring alarms in all newly constructed single-family homes and multifamily
dwellings where building permits took effect Jan. 1, 2007.
Phase II, requiring alarms in all existing single-family homes goes into effect Friday.
Phase III, requiring all existing multifamily or apartment dwelling units have alarms
goes into effect in August 2009.
Jason and Melissa Griggs of Oronoco, Minn., and their extended family have been instrumental in passing the legislation following the death of their 3-year-old daughter,
Hannah, from carbon-monoxide poisoning.
Jason Griggs was awakened in the middle of the night in March 2004 when his wife fell
unconscious after getting out of bed. He called 911. Waiting for the paramedics, "I
started to get really ill, violently ill," he recalled two years ago, soon after the
requirements were signed into law.
Improper ventilation of their furnace combined with a downdraft resulted in a carbon
monoxide build-up in the Griggs home. Paramedics saved Griggs, his wife, Melissa, and
their infant daughter but couldn't revive Hannah.
Carbon-monoxide poisoning is the leading cause of accidental poisoning deaths in the
country, according to the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The Minnesota Department of Health estimates that from 2002-2006, 92 Minnesotans died
from unintentional exposure to this colorless, tasteless, odorless gas.
Carbon monoxide is commonly associated with car exhaust, but any inefficient or malfunctioning fuel-burning device can produce carbon monoxide , including gas furnaces,
water heaters and power generators. In homes without alarms, the poison gas can accumulate without warning to a lethal
level.
Carbon monoxide is commonly associated with car exhaust, but any inefficient or malfunctioning fuel-burning device can produce carbon monoxide , including gas furnaces,
water heaters and power generators. In homes without alarms, the poison gas can accumulate without warning to a lethal level.